| Literature DB >> 28486781 |
Suhair Lolas Hamameh1,2, Paul Renbaum2, Lara Kamal1, Dima Dweik1, Mohammad Salahat1, Tamara Jaraysa1, Amal Abu Rayyan1, Silvia Casadei3, Jessica B Mandell3, Suleyman Gulsuner3, Ming K Lee3, Tom Walsh3, Mary-Claire King3, Ephrat Levy-Lahad2, Moein Kanaan1.
Abstract
Breast cancer among Palestinian women has lower incidence than in Europe or North America, yet is very frequently familial. We studied genetic causes of this familial clustering in a consecutive hospital-based series of 875 Palestinian patients with invasive breast cancer, including 453 women with diagnosis by age 40, or with breast or ovarian cancer in a mother, sister, grandmother or aunt ("discovery series"); and 422 women diagnosed after age 40 and with negative family history ("older-onset sporadic patient series"). Genomic DNA from women in the discovery series was sequenced for all known breast cancer genes, revealing a pathogenic mutation in 13% (61/453) of patients. These mutations were screened in all patients and in 300 Palestinian female controls, revealing 1.0% (4/422) carriers among older, nonfamilial patients and two carriers among controls. The mutational spectrum was highly heterogeneous, including pathogenic mutations in 11 different genes: BRCA1, BRCA2, TP53, ATM, CHEK2, BARD1, BRIP1, PALB2, MRE11A, PTEN and XRCC2. BRCA1 carriers were significantly more likely than other patients to have triple negative tumors (p = 0.03). The single most frequent mutation was TP53 p.R181C, which was significantly enriched in the discovery series compared to controls (p = 0.01) and was responsible for 15% of breast cancers among young onset or familial patients. TP53 p.R181C predisposed specifically to breast cancer with incomplete penetrance, and not to other Li-Fraumeni cancers. Palestinian women with young onset or familial breast cancer and their families would benefit from genetic analysis and counseling.Entities:
Keywords: BRCA1; BRCA2; Palestine; TP53; breast cancer
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28486781 PMCID: PMC5526459 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.30771
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.396